

I’m used to LanguageTool, and at a glance it seems like Harper covers way fewer rules than LanguageTool does. Not sure if this is actually noticeable in practice, but I run my own LanguageTool server and am not too picky about the performance, so I’m not in a rush to move until someone figures out a good way to compare them. LanguageTool’s rules are all open source at least, so it’s only a matter of time before Harper gets anything it might be missing.
The Ratchet & Clank CPU Limited run has some noticeable FPS dips/loss under NTSYNC that FSYNC doesn’t have. It seems like NTSYNC generally trails or ties FSYNC in most other cases. I didn’t watch every minute of the footage - just skipped around through some of the CPU-limited sections since I imagine that’s the only part that matters. In any case, it seems like there’s not much to gain from using NTSYNC yet; maybe improvements will be made to at least tie FSYNC. My rudimentary (possibly incorrect) understanding is that FSYNC is hacky and that NTSYNC is the “correct” way to do it, so if nothing else getting NTSYNC to tie FSYNC means FSYNC can be deprecated at least.